Two lines/phrases which strongly show this are:
“The people who did not begin and end each day in shades of gray”
and “world of colour-reds, blues, and strolling down the street”
<h3>Which two lines best reflect how the setting influences Inge’s daily life, Explain briefly?</h3>
This line “the people who did not begin and end each day in shades of grey. it was alive and brimming with activity” shows she thinks that the life of these people was not just grey like her own life, but it was full of colours. it was also very alive and full of activity.
The phrase “world of colour-reds, blues, and strolling down the street” shows her enviously thinking of men in red and blue shirts and ties walking on the road.
Some other phrases showing that Inge was envious of the outside world are, “Inge was drawn to the sounds” and “glimpse of a whole new world”.
Thus, this could be the answer.
To learn more about Inge’s daily life click here:
brainly.com/question/14131384
#SPJ1
Answer:
well the first settlement was "Jamestown" but they had C) House of BurgessesJamestown and it has the word so I'm guessing c, sorry if im wrong tho! and I already learned about this too...
Explanation:
Hope helps! maybe mark me brainliest?
Answer:
The irony is in the fact that both the lion and the tiger end up doing exactly the opposite of what they intended.
Explanation:
Hi. From the context of your question, we can see that you are referring to “The Cowardly Lion and Hungry Tiger,” which was written by L. Frank Baum. In this story we meet a lion who leaves its habitat determined to tear apart the first person it meets. In the same story, we see a tiger, which leaves its habitat determined to eat the first human baby it targets in front of it. The ironic thing is that when they find what they want they do completely different things.
The lion finds a woman lying on the ground and instead of tearing her to pieces, it lifts the woman and takes her home very gently and safely. The tiger, upon finding a baby on the ground, does not devour the baby, but takes it very gently to its mother, who is the woman the lion helped.
settle
[set-l]
verb (used with object), set·tled, set·tling.
to appoint, fix, or resolve definitely and conclusively; agree upon (as time, price, or conditions).
to place in a desired state or in order
That's what settle means
old
[ohld]
adjective, old·er, old·est or eld·er, eld·est.
far advanced in the years of one's or its life:
an old man; an old horse; an old tree.
of or relating to the latter part of the life or term of existence of a person or thing
That's what old means
Did you find your answer?? I tried....